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Beehive Briquettes: Beehive briquettes are mainly charcoal briquettes made from char and clay
mud mixed in certain proportion. Mud acts mainly as binding agent and reduces the rate of
burning. The beehive briquette is a circular shape briquette having diameter of 145 mm and height
of 85 mm with 21 holes of 12 mm diameter. Due to the holes, it looks like beehive, thus the name
came Beehive Briquette. Dried beehive briquette produces smokeless blue flame during burning for
2.5 to 3 hrs. It can be burnt in a specially made metal stove. The briquette is placed on the grate
of the stove and ignited by putting a fire below by dried woodchips. Once the briquette catches fire
at the base, fire spreads uniformly and propagates upward. It can be used for cooking and space
heating. This could be an eco-friendly alternative clean source of household fuel to save electricity
and wood fuel. Emission of harmful gases from burring briquette is very low as compared to wood
and woody biomass which are commonly used by rural people. The calorific value of this briquette
is approximately 18-20 MJ/kg and emission of CO, CO2, CH4, NO, and NOx ranges between 0.050.1%, 0.1-0.5%, 100-200 ppm, 0.5-3.0 ppm and 0.5-3.5 ppm respectively which is well within the
permissible limit.
Raw materials and equipments needed for making
briquette:
4. Briquetting mould: This is the most important tool in making beehive briquette. It gives the
shape and required compaction to the briquette. The mould consists of a base plate of 5 mm
thickness containing 21 iron pegs of 12 mm diameter, a perforated pressure plate and a cylinder of
85 mm diameter. It is very simple to fabricate and easy to use.
pieces
will
further
help
in
quick
process
and
better
quality
of
charcoal.
Step 3: Making Charcoal Place the charring drum over platform of three bricks arranged in
triangular shape. Put the chimney with conical grate in the drum. Fill the drum with biomass by
keeping the woody biomass at bottom and loose at top. Fire it from top and go on adding biomass.
Allow it to burn for one hour or as long as white smoke comes. When smoke transform to gray or
colourless, remove the chimney extension, cover the lid and make it airtight by putting water in
the sealing gutter. Allow the drum to be cooled for another two hours or more. Now the biomass
has been converted into charcoal. Then take out the charcoal from drum and grind it by a wooden
hammer.
Step 4: Preparation of binder Collect the soil or mud from any agricultural field. Wean out
stones or big size clods from the soil. If the soil is dry then mix water to make it sticky so that it
can
be
good
binder.
Step 5: Preparing the briquette Mix thoroughly the ground charcoal with soil at a ratio of
70:30 by volume or 60:40 by weight. Put the cylinder and perforated pressure plate of the mould
on the base plate. Fill the cylinder with the mixture and beat it over a wooden plank for
compaction. Then takeout the cylinder along with the briquette out from the pegs and put it upside-down
to
release
the
briquette
by
putting
pressure
on
the
pressure
plate.
Step 6: Drying of briquettes Sun dry the briquettes for a week and then store it. It can be
burnt efficiently in a beehive briquette stove. One briquette of around 500 grams will burn for 2.5
to 3 hours and gives smokeless blue flame while burning.
Pictorial steps of briquette making
Cost details: Cost details are presented below which shows that targeting to produce 6000
briquettes per month a profit of Rs. 21,000 can be earned. It is also showing that input cost per
briquette is Rs. 6.50. If charcoal is produced in-house then the cost could be much lower.
1. Fixed cost monthly
Rs.
Comment
Charring Drum
Mould
Total Monthly depreciation
2. Operation cost monthly
Charcoal
208
21
229
20000
2000
2000
6000 Pieces
Rs. 10
Rs. 60,000
Rs. 39,000
Rs. 21000